Hi Marvin,
Thank you so much for your help. I was able to download that driver and
take it to my Linux computer. However, when I tried to install it, using
the exact words and commands that you gave, this is the result that I
got at the terminal:
To run a command as administrator (user "root"), use "sudo <command>".
See "man sudo_root" for details.
koolkatkiwi@kath:~$ tar zxf martian-ubuntu-2.6.17-10-generic.tar.gz
koolkatkiwi@kath:~$ sudo make install
Password:
make: *** No rule to make target `install'. Stop.
koolkatkiwi@kath:~$
koolkatkiwi@kath:~$ man install
Reformatting install(1), please wait...
koolkatkiwi@kath:~$ make all
make: *** No rule to make target `all'. Stop.
koolkatkiwi@kath:~$ sudo make install
Password:
make: *** No rule to make target `install'. Stop.
koolkatkiwi@kath:~$ make all
make: *** No rule to make target `all'. Stop.
koolkatkiwi@kath:~$
Then, I tried again today, and this was the result:
koolkatkiwi@kath:~$ make clean
make: *** No rule to make target `clean'. Stop.
koolkatkiwi@kath:~$
The terminal would not accept the simplest command. Who's the boss here,
anyway? ;o) The only thing I could do was look at the manual, but I
didn't find an answer there. I am reading everything I can about Linux,
but I'm afraid I'm stumped. I know nothing about the terminal at all,
and am trying to learn. Also, I read somewhere that you have to be VERY
careful when using "sudo" as you might make your system unusable. Well,
I'm using "sudo" without the least clue, so I'm sure to mess up my
system sooner or later ;o)
The thing is, it doesn't seem to want to run the command "make" or
"install". Any suggestions? My problem is that I can't find any advice
that is dumbed down enough. It seems like I really need to know every
single word to type, where to type it, and when to press "enter". I
actually thought I was reasonably intelligent before I installed Linux.
Hee-hee.
Cheers,
Kath.
P.S. I haven't even begun to look at the IRQ.
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: Kath Worsfold, New Zealand Ubuntu 6.10 kernel
2.6.17-10-generic
Date: Tue, 7 Aug 2007 22:11:09 -0400
From: Marvin Stodolsky <marvin.stodolsky@xxxxxxxxx>
To: songs@xxxxxxxxxxxx
CC: DISCUSS@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
References: <46B91CBD.5070101@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Bill & Kath
The modem has a supported Lucent/Agere Mars or Apollo DSP (digital signal
processing) chipset. Support packages for 2.6.n kernels are at:
http://phep2.technion.ac.il/linmodems/packages/ltmodem/kernel-2.6/martian/
The martian-ubuntu-2.6.17-10-generic.tar.gz package has precompiled
resources matching your kernel.
Under Linux unpack with:
$ tar zxf martian*.tar.gz
and install with:
$ sudo make install
However functioning will likely be blocked by the:
The modem interrupt (IRQ) is 255 . IRQs of 0 or 255 are not functional!!
problem described in ModemData.txt
You will have to work around that before
$ sudo martian_modem
will be effective.
MarvS
scanModem maintainer
See AgereDSP.txt for operational Details.
On 8/7/07, Bill & Kath Worsfold <songs@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hello from Kath in New Zealand. I have just had Ubuntu installed on a
computer - no dual boot, just Linux. I'd like to get the modem working,
so that I can go onto the internet and update the packages, etc. I'm
very sorry, but I'm really new to the command line, and am having
trouble getting this modem to work. I have a reasonable knowledge of
Windows, but am a rank novice at Linux, and need to be spoken to as such
;o) Thanks to the Community for all the help you give people.
Cheers,
Kath Worsfold
Only plain text email is forwarded by the DISCUSS@xxxxxxxxxxxxx List Server.
Do use the following as the email Subject Line:
SomeName, YourCountry Ubuntu 6.10 kernel 2.6.17-10-generic
This will alert cogent experts, and distinguish cases in the Archives.
YourCountry will enable Country Code guidance.
Occassionally responses are blocked by an Internet Provider mail filters.
So in a day, also check the Archived responses at http://www.linmodems.org .
Local Linux experts can be found through: http://www.linux.org/groups/index.html
-------------------------- System information ----------------------------
CPU=i686, Ubuntu 6.10
Linux version 2.6.17-10-generic (root@vernadsky) (gcc version 4.1.2 20060928 (prerelease) (Ubuntu 4.1.1-13ubuntu5)) #2 SMP Fri Oct 13 18:45:35 UTC 2006 (Ubuntu 2.6.17-10.33-generic)
scanModem update of: 2007_August_04
ALSAversion 1.0.11
USB modem not detected by lsusb
Modem or host audio card candidates have firmware information:
PCI slot PCI ID SubsystemID Name
---------- --------- --------- --------------
00:0e.0 11c1:044c 11c1:044c Communication controller: Agere Systems LT WinModem
Modem interrupt assignment and sharing:
--- Bootup diagnostics for card in PCI slot 00:0e.0 ----
=== Finished modem firmware and bootup diagnostics section. ===
=== Next deducing cogent software ===
===================================
The modem interrupt (IRQ) is 255 . IRQs of 0 or 255 are not functional!!
The CPU cannot control the modem until this situation is corrected!!
Possible corrections are:
1) Within the boot up BIOS, change from a Windows to a non-PNP/Other Operating System type.
Instructions for accessing BIOS are at:
http://linmodems.technion.ac.il/resources.html within: Additional Resourcces.
2a) Add an option "pci=routeirq" to the kernel boot up line.
Here is an example paragraph from /boot/grub/menu.lst :
title Ubuntu, kernel 2.6.15-26-686
root (hd0,6)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.15-26-686 root=/dev/hda7 ro pci=routeirq
initrd /boot/initrd.img-2.6.15-26-686
savedefault
2b) Same as above, but use "pollirq" instead of "pci=routeirq".
3) Within some BIOS setups, IRQ assignments can be changed.
4) On non-laptop systems, moving the modem card to another slot has helped.
5) Sometimes upgrading the kernel changes IRQ assignment.
=====================================
For candidate modem in PCI bus: 00:0e.0
Class 0780: 11c1:044c Communication controller: Agere Systems LT WinModem
Primary PCI_id 11c1:044c
Support type needed or chipset: Agere.DSP
The modem has a supported Lucent/Agere Mars or Apollo DSP (digital signal
processing) chipset. Support packages for 2.6.n kernels are at:
http://phep2.technion.ac.il/linmodems/packages/ltmodem/kernel-2.6/martian/
See AgereDSP.txt for Details.
DSP=1
Vendor 11c1 is Lucent Technologies with modem technology now under LSI Inc.
Their Linux code developer/maintainer is Soumyendu Sarkar. Support for a chipset and its
continued maintenance is only initiated at the request of a major chipset buyer,
or comparable sponsor. Several different modem chipset types are produced:
with varying support under Linux.
Device ID Support Name Comment
--------- ------------- ----------- -----------------------------
0480 serial drivers Venus controller chipset 1673JV7
0440-045d martian Mars/Apollo DSP (digital signal processing) chipsets
0462 none 56K.V90/ADSL Wildwire
048d none SV2P soft modem
048(c or f) AGRSM SV2P soft modem
0600 none soft modem, very few in the field.
0620 AGRSM Pinball soft modem, in some HP desktop PCs
062(1-3) none SV92PP,Pinball soft modem, in some HP desktop PCs
martian - At http://phep2.technion.ac.il/linmodems/packages/ltmodem/kernel-2.6/martian/
AGRSM - At http://phep2.technion.ac.il/linmodems/packages/ltmodem/kernel-2.6/
agrsm-alpha.tar.bz2 potentially provides support for PCI_id chipsets
11c1:048c, 11c1:048f and 11c1:0620
in addition to prior support of Subsystems under Intel 8086:???? below
11C1:048C
11C1:048F
11C1:0620
8086:(2416 2426 7196 2486 24C6 24CD6 266D) are soft modem controllers, better
supported through ALSA modem drivers and the Smartlink slmodemd helper.
There has only been one reported success for 11c1:048c, 11c1:048f and 11c1:0620. See:
http://linmodems.technion.ac.il/bigarch/archive-seventh/msg00849.html
http://linmodems.technion.ac.il/bigarch/archive-seventh/msg00970.html
Interaction with experts will likely be necessary to get any of these modems working.
0x044c -- Mars 3 Perseus data/fax only:North America and Global board
0x044c -- Mars 3.2 Mercury data fax only when no eeprom is present, North America DAA
-------------- end Agere Systems section -------------------
Completed candidate modem analyses.
The base of the UDEV device file system is: /dev/.udev
Versions adequately match for the compiler installed: 4.1.2
and the compiler used in kernel assembly: 4.1.2
Kernel-header resources needed for compiling are not manifestly ready!
If compiling is necessary packages must be installed, providing:
linux-headers-2.6.17-10-generic
If a driver compilation files with message including some lack of some FileName.h (stdio.h for example.
Some additional kernel-header files need installation to /usr/include.
For Debian/Ubuntu related distributions, run the following command to display the needed package list:
$ sudo apt-get -s install linux-kernel-devel
While some of the files may be on the install CD, others may have to be found through http://packages.ubuntu.com
For Ubunut feisty, additional packages required were:
build-essential curl debhelper dpkg-dev g++ g++-4.1 gettext git-core gitk
html2text intltool-debian kernel-package kernel-wedge libc6-dev
libcurl3-gnutls libdigest-sha1-perl liberror-perl libstdc++6-4.1-dev
linux-libc-dev po-debconf rcs tcl8.4 tk8.4
Checking pppd properties:
-rwsr-xr-- 1 root dip 260920 2006-07-11 07:13 /usr/sbin/pppd
In case of an "error 17" "serial loopback" problem, see:
http://phep2.technion.ac.il/linmodems/archive-sixth/msg02637.html
To enable dialout without Root permission do:
$ su - root (not for Ubuntu)
sudo chmod a+x /usr/sbin/pppd
or under Ubuntu related Linuxes
sudo chmod a+x /usr/sbin/pppd
Checking settings of: /etc/ppp/options
asyncmap 0
auth
crtscts
lock
hide-password
modem
proxyarp
lcp-echo-interval 30
lcp-echo-failure 4
noipx
In case of a message like:
Warning: Could not modify /etc/ppp/pap-secrets: Permission denied
see http://linmodems.technion.ac.il/bigarch/archive-sixth/msg04656.html
Don't worry about the following, it is for the experts
should trouble shooting be necessary.
==========================================================
Checking for modem support lines:
--------------------------------------
/device/modem symbolic link:
slmodemd created symbolic link /dev/ttySL0:
Within /etc/udev/ files:
/etc/udev/rules.d/60-symlinks.rules:# Create /dev/modem symlink
/etc/udev/rules.d/60-symlinks.rules:KERNEL=="ttyLTM[0-9]*", SYMLINK+="modem"
Within /etc/modprobe.conf files:
/etc/modprobe.d/alsa-base:options snd-atiixp-modem index=-2
/etc/modprobe.d/alsa-base:options snd-via82xx-modem index=-2
/etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-modem:# Uncomment these entries in order to blacklist unwanted modem drivers
/etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-modem:# blacklist snd-atiixp-modem
/etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-modem:# blacklist snd-via82xx-modem
Within any ancient /etc/devfs files:
Within ancient kernel 2.4.n /etc/module.conf files:
--------- end modem support lines --------
--
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.5.476 / Virus Database: 269.11.8/940 - Release Date: 8/6/2007 4:53 PM
--
**************************************************
Bill & Kath - Kiwi Entertainers!
Phone: (09)425-9538 Fax: (09)425-9669
Website: www.billkath.co.nz
Email: songs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
***************************************************